# Future Vision WASTE's design philosophy is still sound: small trusted groups, no central server, encrypted everything, equal nodes. That's essentially what Signal's sealed sender and private groups do today, just without a self-hosted option. This gap is worth filling. --- ## Architecture Two clean layers, connected by the IPC port. ### Daemon The real application. A long-running background process that handles everything: - Peer mesh and connection management - Cryptography and handshake - NAT traversal and relay fallback - File transfer Exposes a local JSON API over TCP (`127.0.0.1:17337`). Can run headlessly — SSH into a box and the mesh stays alive even with no UI attached. ### UI Layer Talks to the daemon over the IPC port. The separation means the UI is replaceable without touching the core. Target: a web frontend (React or similar) wrapped in a native binary using a Tauri-style approach — native packaging, OS webview, no Electron weight. Avoids the wxWidgets ugliness of the old wxWASTE fork and the Qt licensing headaches of the VIA fork. #### TUI (near-term) A terminal UI is worth building first, as a `cmd/tui` using [Bubble Tea](https://github.com/charmbracelet/bubbletea). Since the IPC contract is already the full boundary, a TUI is just another client — connect to `127.0.0.1:17337`, receive the `state_snapshot`, then funnel incoming events into Bubble Tea's update loop. Incoming mesh events map naturally onto its Elm-style message model. Benefits over jumping straight to a native GUI: - Works over SSH; zero packaging complexity - Validates the full IPC protocol and message flow end-to-end - Useful day-to-day while the native UI is still future work The TUI doesn't replace the long-term GUI — it won't serve non-technical friends — but it's the right first UI milestone. --- ## Protocol Modernization ### NAT Traversal The main unsolved problem from the original WASTE — one party always needed an open port. - Try UDP hole punching (STUN) first - Fall back to an encrypted relay (DERP-style) when hole punching fails - Relay sees only opaque encrypted blobs — end-to-end encryption holds - Run the relay on a Hetzner VPS; `waste-relay` already implements the blind-forward model ### Bootstrapping & Rendezvous No DHT needed at small group scale (10–50 nodes). Keep it simple: - Each peer generates an Ed25519 keypair on first run — the public key **is** their identity - Share a small signed invite file (`.waste-invite`) out of band: email, Signal, whatever - The invite contains: current IP:port hint + public key + short-lived signature - Once two peers connect, they gossip each other's addresses to mutual friends - A local known-peers list in the data directory is sufficient at this scale ### Identity - Persistent Ed25519 keypair, generated once - Public key = stable identity, not a mutable nickname - No phone number, no central registry — closer to Signal's model than WASTE's original unregistered aliases ### Per-Network Share Directories The current `-share-dir` flag is a single global directory. Eventually, each network should have its own independent share set: - Alice shares `/home/alice/Downloads/work-files` on the "work" network - Alice shares `/home/alice/Music` on the "friends" network - Peers on "work" never see Alice's music, and vice versa When multi-network support lands (see below), the `ShareDir` field on `networkCtx` replaces the current global `Mesh.ShareDir`. The IPC `get_file_list` and daemon `-share-dir` flag should move to be per-network configuration — either via a config file or via an IPC command `set_share_dir` scoped to a `network_id`. ### Multi-Network Support A single client should be able to participate in multiple networks simultaneously (e.g. "work" and "friends") without leaking that both identities belong to the same person. **Privacy constraint:** if the same Ed25519 keypair is used across networks, any peer who is a member of both networks can trivially correlate you. The anchor also sees the same public key across networks. **Solution — per-network derived identities:** - One master Ed25519 seed in `identity.json` - Per-network keypair = `HKDF(masterSeed, "yaw2-net", networkHash)` - Same master + same network name = same derived keypair (stable identity within a network) - Different networks = different peer IDs; correlation is impossible without knowing both network names - The anchor sees only the derived public key **Daemon changes:** - Replace the single `networkCancel` with a `map[networkID]*networkCtx` - Each context holds its own: derived identity, mesh, anchor connection, store (`messages-.db`) - `join_network` returns a `network_id` token used to scope subsequent commands **IPC changes (breaking):** - All commands and events gain a `network_id` field - `get_state` returns an array of all joined networks - `join_network` responds with `network_joined` carrying the derived peer ID for that network **TUI changes:** - Top-level network switcher (e.g. `[work] [friends]`) - Rooms and peers are scoped per network underneath ### Transport (Long-term) Current transport is TCP with custom framing. QUIC is worth revisiting once the core is solid — it gives multiplexing and better NAT traversal behavior essentially for free. --- ## Roadmap | Priority | Item | |---|---| | 1 | Deploy `waste-relay` to Hetzner; verify cross-internet NAT traversal | | 2 | Invite file format (`.waste-invite`) — solve bootstrapping without manual IP sharing | | 3 | Peer gossip — auto-connect to friends-of-friends after initial invite | | 4 | File transfer — chunked, encrypted, resumable | | 5 | Message persistence — SQLite via `modernc.org/sqlite` | | 6 | UI — web frontend consuming the IPC port; native packaging | | 7 | UDP hole punching — full STUN implementation in `internal/nat` | | 8 | QUIC transport — replace TCP framing for better NAT behavior | --- ## What to Keep from WASTE - **Small group** — not a public network, not federated, not discoverable - **No registration** — no phone number, no email, no central service - **Encrypted everything** — at rest and in transit, end to end - **Equal nodes** — no peer is "the server"; the relay is dumb infrastructure only - **The soul** — a private overlay for people you actually trust